On this blog, Professor Thaddeus Pope tracks judicial, legislative, policy, and academic developments concerning medical futility and the limits on individual autonomy at the end of life.
Friday, February 15, 2013
Life Sustaining Treatment Withdrawn too Soon?
Research presented a few days ago at the International Stroke Conference suggests that life-sustaining treatment may be withdrawn from patients with intracerebral hemorrhage who may have had an "acceptable clinical outcome" had their treatment been sustained.
At hospital discharge, 4% of the patients who were to have life-sustaining measures withdrawn had an "acceptable clinical outcome" (a modified Rankin Scale score of 4 or better). The study suggests that "self-fulfilling prognostic pessimism" could play a role in decisions surrounding life support.
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